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Wednesday, 5 February 2014

The Clash: Why They Still Matter – To Authors by Rory Costello

Just a wee note before Rory's brilliant post. There are a couple of books available today for free and I think you should give them a try if you haven't already. The first is One Day In The Life Of Jason Dean, a wonderful novella that will hit you in the heart and, new from Blasted Heath, Gerard Brennan's Breaking Point. Mr Brennan's a great writer and it just needs to be downloaded.

End of public information.

Here's Rory...

It’s been more than a decade since Joe
Strummer died. It’s close to 30 years since The Clash put out an album (if you
want to remember Cut the Crap, that is).

Yet the legend of “The Only Band That
Matters” lives on…and one of the less obvious ways it has done so in recent
years is through crime/hard-boiled fiction. At least four authors – Paul D.
Brazill, Nick Quantrill, Tony Black, and Martyn Waites – have used Clash song
titles to name some of their works. Another, Josh Stallings, has made the
band’s music a source of motivation for Moses McGuire, the star of three novels.
Black’s star character (Gus Dury) and Quantrill’s (Joe Geraghty) are also
clearly shown to be fans. Like Moses, Gus and Joe throw on their favorite Clash
albums when they need a lift.

So what’s behind this homage?

In July 2013, shortly after he released Gunsof Brixton, Brazill wrote here, “When
I decided to write a faux London gangster story,
it seemed the sensible thing to take a title from a song by The Clash, that
most London of all London bands.” You could get into a debate
with Paul about whether The Jam were even more London – in subject matter at
least – but there’s no arguing his main point: “There was something about the
scary lyrics…and cod reggae feel that seemed to suit a faux London gangster
story down to the ground.”

Just below on the same blog page, there’s
one of Paul’s Short, Sharp Interviews – with Nick Quantrill, following the
release of The Crooked Beat (Joe Geraghty #3). Nick observed, “It’s also
a track on The Clash’s ‘Sandinista!’ album. It pains me to say it, but I
wouldn’t go out of your way to track it down.” While the work was in progress,
Nick did a close-up with
Carol Bridgestock, noting that he too tends to use song titles for his books.
Quite simply, “The Crooked Beat” fits the theme of the story nicely.

London Calling is the title cut from a collection of Tony Black’s short pieces. It’s
an interesting choice in that much of Black’s work is steeped in Scottishness.
But as a key line in the story puts it, “The Clash get me moving; London
Calling sets the mood as I fire off the shots.” Gus Dury is an
anti-authoritarian character, giving him much in common with Joe Strummer. It’s
also interesting to note that the fourth of the Dury series, Long Time Dead,
is being developed as a movie by director Richard Jobson. Jobson was once the
frontman for The Skids, a Scottish rock band who supported The Clash back in
October 1977 (one of the earliest gigs for the boys from Dunfermline).

Originally published in 2008, White Riot
is an apt choice for Martyn Waites’ novel (#3 in his Joe Donovan series) about deadly
ethnic conflict in Newcastle.
After it came out, Tony Black conducted an interview with Waites for Shots, the
crime and thriller ezine. The chat started
off like this:

TONY BLACK: So, White Riot...bit of
a Clash fan?

MARTYN WAITES: Absolutely. I think most
right minded people are. And I don’t think it’s just a question of my age, my
daughters love the Clash too. But all the books have been named after song
titles, some, admittedly, more obscure than others. White Riot was such
a perfect fit for this one that I couldn’t resist.

Among others, Waites has drawn upon the
works of Nick Cave, Tom Waits, and Talking Heads for
some of his other titles. He spoke more broadly here about how music has
inspired and informed his writing.

“As for punk – what I loved about it was
the same as what I loved about Hammett’s writing for Black Mask. Formulaic but
when a great artist is using that formula, exciting as hell. Some people think
that the strictures of crime writing…are too rigid. I disagree. Good
practitioners can use those restrictions and create something truly unique.
That’s what I thought crime writing and punk (and new wave and post-punk) had
in common.”

Josh Stallings has also talked about how
music influences him in both his professions. In a chat with author Thomas
Pluck, he said, “Music drives my brain and my film cutting. Trailers are
tightly condensed, highly rhythmic stories.” Josh likes and uses quite a
variety of sounds, but when it comes down to it, he says, “More Clash, more
Pogues. Can’t have enough of them lads. I have a copy of Josh Rouse doing ‘Straight
To Hell’ as a ballad. Fucking blows my mind.”

Yet no author – in crime fiction or any
other genre – is ever likely to take the Clash influence as far as Caryl Férey.
This Frenchman’s novel La jambe gauche de Joe Strummer (Joe
Strummer’s Left Leg) was published in 2007. Such is Férey’s passion that
even the chapter titles are drawn from Clash songs. So far, only an excerpt
from this book appears to have been translated into English (and just a few of
Férey’s full works are available in translation). But this passage from a
French-language interview
with Férey, which I translate here, nicely captures the spirit that enlivens
the works of the other authors discussed here.

“Like many people of my generation [Férey
was born in 1967], the first chords of ‘London Calling’ turned my head upside
down. I grew up with Strummer’s lyrics, his intransigence and his moral
rectitude. A model of ethics, never called into question.”